Hollis Explorer rebreather

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Yes I use 15% in it. That doesn't affect the ndls any and for me the narcosis reduction and the slightly easier breathing makes for a good trade off...

40/15 drops the END from 45fsw to 33fsw. Now that's something to consider. :D
 
You know I have not got a chance to dive my unit, but the pre production units I dove did not seem to this problem that I can remember could it be a packing issue or differance in pre production and now? What sorb is being used, packing technics are used? Please do not take this as anything more than a concerned owner.
 
I dove three of the pre-production units, all had the exact same issue(s).
 
I wonder it they put to much nanny control in the latest software?

I had no issues with prototype unit. It was usually NDL and HP gas limiting dive time and I did several one hour dives where I used up full two hour scrubber duration
Michael I think you've hit the nail on the head
 
Whatever the problem is, the rigs I've personally breathed from will not beat an Aluminum 80 against a decent SAC rate without doing the scrubber cheat procedure. My theory is if you are pulling the scrubber between dives, letting it cool, reinstalling it, and then tricking the computer to think you installed a fresh scrubber you should simply mail the unit back to Hollis and wait for a fix before you eventually ace yourself. Personally, I think we should treat the Explorer with the same care as a fully closed circuit rig. Reloading a partially used scrubber in the rig is not acceptable when you have no clue how much is used - and it's begging for an accident as soon as someone accidentally loads basket #1 even though they were sure it was basket number 2.
 
I had no issues with prototype unit. It was usually NDL and HP gas limiting dive time and I did several one hour dives where I used up full two hour scrubber duration
Michael I think you've hit the nail on the head

I'm very late to this party, but with a voice of reason like Dave chiming in I want to ask a non-loaded question.

Assuming the Explorer is tweaked to run as the manufacturer said with approx. 2 hour limit, I would still like to know the advantages and disadvantages in a side-by-side comparison between OC nitrox and 2 different approaches to SCR -- the Explorer and the GEM. I'm not even throwing in active SCR like a Draeger. Just because something can be done electronically doesn't necessarily mean that it should. And this is coming from an eCCR guy.

I can understand a little about a market for recreational CCR, and that will definitely be more complicated. But for recreational SCR, what advantages does a complex electronic system have over a passive system that is almost like being on OC nitrox, but with an extended gas supply. I guess in theory the system could decided whether a 5:1 ratio is better at this depth than a standard 3:1 and could maximize the supply. But putting all the limitations on it seems to throw away any advantages it might have.

I just don't see the allure, and I wasn't at DEMA. Please enlighten me.
 
The number one issue for low scrubber life count by the system is the solenoid. Every time it fires the system counts it and every click counts off a scrubber life (whether used or not). This is why I use 40% with dcp in manual mode at less then 40. With a CO2 sensor, it somewhat overrides the click counter with real data from the sensor.

Daru

Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk
 
Correct me if I'm wrong but the CO2 sensor doesn't measure the amount of CO2 generated but measures the level of CO2 in the loop that would increase in the event of break through or scrubber failure. Technically the CO2 sensor should see nothing until the scrubber fails, so how would it be able to override the click count? Would it??
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/peregrine/

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